This study attempts to demonstrate the relationship between teachers’childhood experiences with their parents and their emotional, cognitive, and behavioral reactions to a hypothetical student’s request to speak with them, expressed in short or detailed form. A similar procedure has been used by Perrine and Steele King for students, and now has been used for teachers. For this purpose, self-report questionnaires were administered to a sample of 395 female teachers. The results showed a significant relationship between parental bonding experiences and behavioral and emotional, but not cognitive, reactions to an hypothetical student’s request. The optimal parenting group reported more positive emotional and behavioral reactions, while the affectionate control group reported more negative emotional reactions to the hypothetical student’s request than the other groups. These results offer useful implications to be utilized in teachers’ training programs.
“Why did you want to see me?”. Teachers' reactions to a student's request as a function of teachers’ personal early experiences of attachment / S., Pallini; Baiocco, Roberto. - In: THE JOURNAL OF GENETIC PSYCHOLOGY. - ISSN 0022-1325. - STAMPA. - 176:1, 2(2015), pp. 26-37. [10.1080/00221325.2014.997660]
“Why did you want to see me?”. Teachers' reactions to a student's request as a function of teachers’ personal early experiences of attachment
BAIOCCO, ROBERTO
2015
Abstract
This study attempts to demonstrate the relationship between teachers’childhood experiences with their parents and their emotional, cognitive, and behavioral reactions to a hypothetical student’s request to speak with them, expressed in short or detailed form. A similar procedure has been used by Perrine and Steele King for students, and now has been used for teachers. For this purpose, self-report questionnaires were administered to a sample of 395 female teachers. The results showed a significant relationship between parental bonding experiences and behavioral and emotional, but not cognitive, reactions to an hypothetical student’s request. The optimal parenting group reported more positive emotional and behavioral reactions, while the affectionate control group reported more negative emotional reactions to the hypothetical student’s request than the other groups. These results offer useful implications to be utilized in teachers’ training programs.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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